18. Application for registration.—(1) Any person claiming to be the proprietor of a trade mark used
or proposed to be used by him, who is desirous of registering it, shall apply in writing to the Registrar in
the prescribed manner for the registration of his trade mark.
(2) A single application may be made for registration of a trade mark for different classes of goods
and services and fee payable therefor shall be in respect of each such class of goods or services.
(3) Every application under sub-section (1) shall be filed in the office of the Trade Marks Registry
within whose territorial limits the principal place of business in India of the applicant or in the case of
joint applicants the principal place of business in India of the applicant whose name is first mentioned in
the application as having a place of business in India, is situate:
Provided that where the applicant or any of the joint applicants does not carry on business in India,
the application shall be filed in the office of the Trade Marks Registry within whose territorial limits the
place mentioned in the address for service in India as disclosed in the application, is situate.
(4) Subject to the provisions of this Act, the Registrar may refuse the application or may accept it
absolutely or subject to such amendments, modifications, conditions or limitations, if any, as he may
think fit.
(5) In the case of a refusal or conditional acceptance of an application, the Registrar shall record in
writing the grounds for such refusal or conditional acceptance and the materials used by him in arriving at
his decision.
19. Withdrawal of acceptance.—Where, after the acceptance of an application for registration of a
trade mark but before its registration, the Registrar is satisfied—
(a) that the application has been accepted in error; or
(b) that in the circumstances of the case the trade mark should not be registered or should be
registered subject to conditions or limitations or to conditions additional to or different from the
conditions or limitations subject to which the application has been accepted,
the Registrar may, after hearing the applicant if he so desires, withdraw the acceptance and proceed as if
the application had not been accepted.
20. Advertisement of application.—(1) When an application for registration of a trade mark has
been accepted, whether absolutely or subject to conditions or limitations, the Registrar shall, as soon as
may be after acceptance, cause the application as accepted together with the conditions or limitations, if
any, subject to which it has been accepted, to be advertised in the prescribed manner:
Provided that the Registrar may cause the application to be advertised before acceptance if it relates
to a trade mark to which sub-section (1) of section 9 and sub-sections (1) and (2) of section 11 apply, or in
any other case where it appears to him that it is expedient by reason of any exceptional circumstances so
to do.
(2) Where—
(a) an application has been advertised before acceptance under sub-section (1); or
(b) after advertisement of an application,—
(i) an error in the application has been corrected; or
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(ii) the application has been permitted to be amended under section 22,
the Registrar may in his discretion cause the application to be advertised again or in any case falling under
clause (b) may, instead of causing the application to be advertised again, notify in the prescribed manner
the correction or amendment made in the application.
21. Opposition to registration.—1
[(1) Any person may, within four months from the date of the
advertisement or re-advertisement of an application for registration, give notice in writing in the
prescribed manner and on payment of such fee as may be prescribed, to the Registrar, of opposition to the
registration.]
(2) The Registrar shall serve a copy of the notice on the applicant for registration and, within two
months from the receipt by the applicant of such copy of the notice of opposition, the applicant shall send
to the Registrar in the prescribed manner a counterstatement of the grounds on which he relies for his
application, and if he does not do so he shall be deemed to have abandoned his application.
(3) If the applicant sends such counter-statement, the Registrar shall serve a copy thereof on the
person giving notice of opposition.
(4) Any evidence upon which the opponent and the applicant may rely shall be submitted in the
prescribed manner and within the prescribed time to the Registrar, and the Registrar shall give an
opportunity to them to be heard, if they so desire.
(5) The Registrar shall, after hearing the parties, if so required, and considering the evidence, decide
whether and subject to what conditions or limitations, if any, the registration is to be permitted, and may
take into account a ground of objection whether relied upon by the opponent or not.
(6) Where a person giving notice of opposition or an applicant sending a counter-statement after
receipt of a copy of such notice neither resides nor carries on business in India, the Registrar may require
him to give security for the costs of proceedings before him, and in default of such security being duly
given, may treat the opposition or application, as the case may be, as abandoned.
(7) The Registrar may, on request, permit correction of any error in, or any amendment of, a notice of
opposition or a counter-statement on such terms as he thinks just.
22. Correction and amendment.—The Registrar may, on such terms as he thinks just, at any time,
whether before or after acceptance of an application for registration under section 18, permit the
correction of any error in or in connection with the application or permit an amendment of the
application:
Provided that if an amendment is made to a single application referred to in sub-section (2) of section
18 involving division of such application into two or more applications, the date of making of the initial
application shall be deemed to be the date of making of the divided applications so divided.
23. Registration.—(1) Subject to the provisions of section 19, when an application for registration of
a trade mark has been accepted and either—
(a) the application has not been opposed and the time for notice of opposition has expired; or
(b) the application has been opposed and the opposition has been decided in favour of the
applicant,
the Registrar shall, unless the Central Government otherwise directs, register the said trade mark 2
[within
eighteen months of the filing of the application] and the trade mark when registered shall be registered as
of the date of the making of the said application and that date shall, subject to the provisions of section
154, be deemed to be the date of registration.
(2) On the registration of a trade mark, the Registrar shall issue to the applicant a certificate in the
prescribed form of the registration thereof, sealed with the seal of the Trade Marks Registry.
1. Subs. by Act 40 of 2010, s. 3, for sub-section (1) (w.e.f. 8-7-2013).
2. Ins. by s. 4, ibid. (w.e.f. 8-7-2013).
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(3) Where registration of a trade mark is not completed within twelve months from the date of the
application by reason of default on the part of the applicant, the Registrar may, after giving notice to the
applicant in the prescribed manner, treat the application as abandoned unless it is completed within the
time specified in that behalf in the notice.
(4) The Registrar may amend the register or a certificate of registration for the purpose of correcting a
clerical error or an obvious mistake.
24. Jointly owned trade marks.—(1) Save as provided in sub-section (2), nothing in this Act shall
authorise the registration of two or more persons who use a trade mark independently, or propose so as to
use it, as joint proprietors thereof.
(2) Where the relations between two or more persons interested in a trade mark are such that no one
of them is entitled as between himself and the other or others of them to use it except—
(a) on behalf of both or all of them; or\
(b) in relation to an article or service with which both or all of them are connected in the course of
trade,
those persons may be registered as joint proprietors of the trade mark, and this Act shall have effect in
relation to any rights to the use of the trade mark vested in those persons as if those rights had been vested
in a single person.
25. Duration, renewal, removal and restoration of registration.—(1) The registration of a trade
mark, after the commencement of this Act, shall be for a period of ten years, but may be renewed from
time to time in accordance with the provisions of this section.
(2) The Registrar shall, on application made by the registered proprietor of a trade mark in the
prescribed manner and within the prescribed period and subject to payment of the prescribed fee, renew
the registration of the trade mark for a period of ten years from the date of expiration of the original
registration or of the last renewal of registration, as the case may be (which date is in this section referred
to as the expiration of the last registration).
(3) At the prescribed time before the expiration of the last registration of a trade mark the Registrar
shall send notice in the prescribed manner to the registered proprietor of the date of expiration and the
conditions as to payment of fees and otherwise upon which a renewal of registration may be obtained,
and, if at the expiration of the time prescribed in that behalf those conditions have not been duly complied
with the Registrar may remove the trade mark from the register:
Provided that the Registrar shall not remove the trade mark from the register if an application is made
in the prescribed form and the prescribed fee and surcharge is paid within six months from the expiration
of the last registration of the trade mark and shall renew the registration of the trade mark for a period of
ten years under sub-section (2).
(4) Where a trade mark has been removed from the register for non-payment of the prescribed fee, the
Registrar shall, after six months and within one year from the expiration of the last registration of the
trade mark, on receipt of an application in the prescribed form and on payment of the prescribed fee, if
satisfied that it is just so to do, restore the trade mark to the register and renew the registration of the trade
mark either generally or subject to such conditions or limitations as he thinks fit to impose, for a period of
ten years from the expiration of the last registration.
26. Effect of removal from register for failure to pay fee for renewal.—Where a trade mark has
been removed from the register for failure to pay the fee for renewal, it shall nevertheless, for the purpose
of any application for the registration of another trade mark during one year, next after the date of the
removal, be deemed to be a trade mark already on the register, unless the tribunal is satisfied either—
(a) that there has been no bona fide trade use of the trade mark which has been removed during
the two years immediately preceding its removal; or
(b) that no deception or confusion would be likely to arise from the use of the trade mark which is
the subject of the application for registration by reason of any previous use of the trade mark which
has been removed.